Wednesday, May 18, 2011 - 9:14 AM

The Rack: Ron Moreau, "The Taliban After bin Laden," Newsweek.
By hook or by crook
The Journal reports that
Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI) is prodding the
insurgent Haqqani network into peace talks with the Afghan government,
resisting U.S. pressure to go after the group's strongholds in North
Waziristan (WSJ).
U.S. officials consider the Haqqanis one of Afghanistan's most violent
and effective insurgent groups, and the increased efforts to target
the Haqqanis, including drone strikes
and concern about a cross-border raid, reportedly led worried Haqqani
members to vacate their compounds in the North Waziristan capital of
Miram Shah in the wake of the U.S. operation that killed Osama bin
Laden.
Afghan news sources also report that the ISI, working
through current operatives or former director Hamid Gul, asked Taliban
leader Mullah Mohammed Omar to leave Pakistan for Afghanistan or a
third country in recent days (Pajhwok, Tolo).
U.S.
senators from both parties yesterday questioned the several billion
dollars in military aid given to Pakistan each year during a caucus
briefing and a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, and Armed
Services Committee chairman Sen. Carl Levin told reporters after the
briefing that Pakistan should take concrete steps towards combating
militancy, especially in fighting the Haqqani network, before receiving
the aid (NYT, Bloomberg).
During the briefing, Sen. John Kerry said Pakistan has four different
probes into Osama bin Laden's death and how he was able to hide
unnoticed in Abbottabad until he was killed by Navy SEALs on May 2 (ET).
Pakistani
security forces yesterday killed five alleged Chechen "suicide
bombers," as they attempted to attack a Frontier Corps checkpoint near
the city of Quetta (Dawn, Geo, ET, Daily Times).
The group, according to officials, consisted of two men and three
women. Five others were killed in Quetta when unidentified gunmen opened
fire on a van (Dawn).
And two Pakistani soldiers and 15 militants were reportedly killed in
fighting on the outskirts of Peshawar when a group of nearly 100
fighters attacked a major checkpoint (NYT, AP, AFP, Reuters, AJE).
Lonely at the top
Longtime
al-Qaeda figure Saif al-Adel has taken temporary control of al-Qaeda,
according to Noman Benotman, a former commander in the Libyan Islamic
Fighting Group (LIFG) and onetime acquaintance of Osama bin Laden in
Afghanistan (CNN, The News, Times).
Citing militant sources and jihadist internet posts, Benotman says
that al-Adel, who was previously al-Qaeda's military leader and was
involved in the 1998 East Africa embassy bombings, was the choice of the
six to eight al-Qaeda leaders present in Afghanistan and Pakistan;
al-Adel fled to Iran after the fall of the Taliban, but is believed to
have left the country for Pakistan sometime last year. According to
al-Jazeera, a militant known as Mustafa al-Yemeni will direct
operations for the group, while the Guardian claims that former
al-Qaeda no. 2 Ayman al-Zawahiri has been named director of
international operations (Reuters, Guardian).
And the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan have released a video threatening
retaliation against the ISI and CIA for bin Laden's killing (AJE).
Pakistani
authorities yesterday announced the arrest in Karachi of a man they
termed a "senior al-Qaeda operative," Mohammed Ali Qasim (also known
as Ali Suhaib al-Makki), who they say operated with al-Qaeda leaders
in the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, though U.S. officials
described him as a mid-level operative and "not a household name" (CNN, McClatchy, Guardian, Reuters, WSJ, AP, Geo).
An anonymous official later called al-Makki a mid-level operative as
well, but said he is "Nonetheless... a very good catch" (Reuters).
Pakistani officials also said that al-Makki, who was born in Yemen
and reportedly arrested May 4, helped plan attacks against Saudi
interests in Pakistan and is close to radical American cleric Anwar
al-Awlaki (BBC).
Greg
Miller writes that the CIA used state-of-the-art high-altitude drones
employing stealth technology to help track Osama bin Laden, deep
inside Pakistani territory and outside of the "flight box" in which
Pakistani authorities allow U.S. drones to operate (Post, AFP).
The existence of the drone, reportedly an RQ-170, was revealed in 2007
after it was seen and photographed at Kandahar Airfield. And in other
bin Laden news, the family of his youngest wife, the Yemeni Amal
Abdulfattah, have demanded that Pakistani authorities repatriate her and
her five children (AFP).
Bloody Wednesday
Up
to 12 civilians have been killed in protests in the northern Afghan
city of Taloqan in Takhar province after a night raid near the city
killed four people NATO forces said were insurgents (BBC, AP, Reuters, AJE). Protesters said all four, including two women, were civilians.
The
AFP reports that the suicide bomber who killed Kandahar province police
chief Khan Mohammad Mujahed last month was Mujahed's bodyguard; the two
had known each other for more than a decade (AFP).
An inquest into the shooting deaths of five British soldiers by an
Afghan policeman in 2009 heard yesterday that the shooter was angry with
his British trainers after they told him to wear his uniform cap,
instead of a brown Afghan hat (Guardian).
British prime minister David Cameron told parliament yesterday that he
would withdraw 400 troops from Afghanistan this year, as part of the
plan to pull all British troops out of Afghanistan by 2014 (Guardian, FT).
The
U.S. Army has charged a sixth person, Staff Sgt. David Bram, with
involvement in the "kill team" that allegedly murdered three Afghan
civilians and posed the bodies to make them look like combatants (NYT, AP).
And four Afghan boys aged eight to ten, arrested under suspicion of
being suicide bombers, claimed their innocence to the Times of London,
and said that they had been beaten and endured electric shocks at the
hands of the Afghan police (Times).
Pathbreaker
The Los Angeles Times today profiles Mina Habib, one of the small but growing group of female journalists in Afghanistan who face threats and family trouble to cover the news (LAT). Habib, the Times writes, helps shine light on issues affecting Afghanistan's "poor and voiceless."
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Surprise, surprise!
Pakistani Intelligence can pressure Haqqanis to negotiate with Afghans and U. S. but can NOT stop Haqqanis from killing US/NATO/Afghan troops in Afghanistan since 2001!
And U. S. has NO problem with such Pakistani shenanigans since U. S. has been gladly pouring billion after billion year in and year out in that terror center, knowing fully well the close comradeship between Pakistani Intelligence and Haqqanis as well as Mullah Omar’s QST.
Thus U. S. has deliberately ignored Taliban’s Pakistani connections in fueling and sustaining Afghan insurgency as reported by Matt Waldman in ‘The sun in the sky‘ on 6/13/2010, corroborated by WikiLeaks leaks on 7/25/2010 and then further corroborated by Chris Alexander, Canadian ambassador to Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005 and Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Afghanistan from 2005 until 2009 in his article on 7/30/2010 titled ‘The huge scale of Pakistan‘s complicity‘.
U. S. indeed deserves to be duped by Pakistan for deaths of US/NATO soldiers while paying out billions of dollars in the process.
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